This guide to Oscar parties will be updated on an ongoing basis until the week of the big event.

It is a good thing 2016 is a leap year.

The bleary morning after the Oscars, the quadrennial February 29, will be a recovery day after nominees, their teams, partners, and co-celebrants dry out after a week spent celebrating the Academy Awards.

Before and after the Chris Rock-hosted telecast on February 28, industry festivities will spread from Hollywood to the beach. Here is TheWrap’s navigational guide.

Tuesday, February 23

Vanity Fair Young Hollywood PartyChateau Marmont
8 p.m.

Always the first event of the week, a young Hollywood A-lister supports a personal charity. This year, it’s Olivia Munn. Other than the host, the people at this one are not those getting coveted Sunday night invitations, but they get to “touch” Oscar week. Fiat sponsors.

Two guys who will both lead Oscar celebrations: Stevie Wonder and James Corden. (CBS)

Talk about a bounce-back. It’s been years since the sheen of Tom Cruise and other A-listers going green on Oscar week at this event lost its luster. Moving from the Avalon in Hollywood, the environmental org has booked a more intimate and festive site over in Beverly Hills. Soledad O’Brien emcees.

Vanity Fair and Barney’s New York Dinner for “Spotlight”Chateau Marmont
7 p.m.

In recent weeks, Best Picture contender “Spotlight” screened at the Vatican before a three-day meeting on clerical sex abuse, the filmmakers traveled to London for the BAFTAs, and writers Josh Singer and Tom McCarthy won WGA awards back home in the U.S. McCarthy, a double Oscar nominee, joins with his nominated cast for a synergistic fundraiser for the non-profit investigative journalism group ProPublica.

Irish Film Board PartyLaurel Hardware
6 p.m.

It’s not just Saoirse Ronan. Between “Room” and “Brooklyn”, Irish Hollywood is celebrating 7 Oscar nominations, the first time this group has thrown an Oscar week event.

This is a new one. We don’t know what to expect, but we know the host is a veteran of a rival luxury car brand that drove home deep-seated relationships with the talent and creative communities. The setting is right. Hopes are high.

J.J. and team “Star Wars” on the global promotional tour for “The Force Awakens”, a contrast to the intimacy of this rooftop soiree in Santa Monica. (Photo by Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images for Walt Disney Studios)

The West Side offices of the now white-hot global force hosts this annual get together where the Irish and Irish-friendly community in Hollywood honors their own, like Daisy Ridley, James Corden, and “Room” director Lenny Abrahamson, who attended Trinity College in Dublin.

“Bigger is not necessarily better,” said Trina Vargo, founder of the U.S.-Ireland Alliance. “We’re not interested in having a thousand people in a hotel ballroom. Guests like this event because it is a unique opportunity for creative individuals to meet each other and talk, honor great work and enjoy great music.”

The celebs pick up honors for using their platforms to highlight their causes, while seven civilian honorees earn stripes for using their voices for positive change.

OK Magazine Pre-Oscar PartyBeso
7:30 p.m.

Yes, it’s a tabloid weekly. However, they are taking their sponsors’ money and putting it to the Global Gift Foundation, which describes their mission as “making a positive impact on the lives of children, women, and families.”

Zac Posen LuncheonEnnis House
1 p.m.

MAC Cosmetics hosts this 50-person lunch for the designer in the days after fashion week.

An Evening With Canada’s StarsFour Seasons Beverly Hills
5 p.m.

Two of Canada’s nominees. (Getty Images)

America’s northern neighbor netted 21 Oscar nominations this year, including Rachel McAdams (“Spotlight”) and three for Denis Villeneuve‘s “Sicario.” True to the nation’s commonwealth roots, the Consulate General of Canada and Telefilm Canada scheduled this event in the early evening “tea-time” slot. No word yet on whether McAdams or fellow Canadian nominee The Weeknd (above) will be in attendance. Update: Expected attendees do not include the above-mentioned and pictured Canadians. Producers from “Room”, “Brooklyn”, and a grab bag of talent like Eugene Levy are on the list.

After a bang-bang “12 Years a Slave” year with a slew of British talent in 2014, the Brits solved their problem of a scarce talent turnout last year by bringing in marquee names to host. Also, it helped to have on-camera nominees and zeitgeisty personalities on the mic. (Corden was just booked to host the Tony Awards.)

Gordon Ramsay directs the menu and singer/songwriter Jamie Cullum will perform at a souped-up edition of this collaboration between the GREAT Britain Campaign, U.K. Trade and Investment, Visit Britain, and the British Film Commission.

A total of 51 women, in front of and behind the camera, are up for Oscars this year. A large number of them will be here 48 hours before the show with a yet-to-be-named co-host joining Cathy Schulman. Last year, it was Meryl Streep. She had to be whisked out when it was time to go amid the crush of well-wishers. Fiji water, Perrier-Jouet, BMW, Max Mara, and MAC Cosmetics help spin this event before, during, and after (in the goodie bags).

Vanity Fair DJ NightPalihouse
9 p.m.

The door is tight and Palihouse is small. VF almost always goes with a female DJ for the younger-skewing night, continuing the trend with under-the appreciated Taryn Manning. Hailee Steinfeld hosts this stop. Like the other VF events besides Oscar night, you likely won’t see Graydon Carter as these are publishing-side (read: advertiser driven) gatherings, with this one put on by client L’Oreal Paris. Children’s Hospital L.A. is the charity partner.

Weinstein Late Night

1OAK

It will be hard to top the late-night that 1Oak has had already after Kanye’s late-night anti-Taylor Swift, pro-Tidal rant that went viral on Tuesday night. I trust the Weinsteins, David Glasser, and Michelle Pesce are up to the task.

After a horsetrack setting of cocktails in the morning swigged by those in fashionable daywear, Kate McKinnon and Kumail Nanjianai hand out 15 awards for a well-lubricated crowd in a beachside tent before they retreat east of Beverly Glen for the rest of the weekend.

The crowd gets jovial courtesy of Heineken, Fiji Water, America Airlines, and Jaguar, with Film Independent ushering their backers to the best seats in the house — the front row. For those who can’t get seats, enjoy the spread of sponsor tents.

Golin produced two of the eight Best Picture nominees (“Spotlight” and “The Revenant”). Sugar is also a nominated producer for “Spotlight”, so the Anonymous Content guys have a lot to celebrate. Presented by Grey Goose, this industry-heavy soiree skews towards younger executives and deal makers. Just because it’s insular and at the Tower, don’t think there won’t be a line. There will be.

Weinstein Dinner

The Montage

This timeslot with the Weinsteins is laden with history, going back to their epic 1998 Oscars in the Miramax days.The industry-friendly hotel plays host to TheWrap’s annual media conference, is where Justin Bieber calls home in L.A., and is where Sean Penn emerged after news broke of his El Chapo rendezvous.

MPTF Night Before Fundraiser

Raleigh Studios

The press-free fundraiser, heavy on sponsors and A-listers, has raised $65 million since its inception. Nice work, Jeffrey Katzenberg. Michelle Pesce steps in behind the decks for this coveted invite.

A peek inside the 2013 bash, where this columnist picked the most Oscar winers of any male and won Elton’s Chopard watch. (Alexandra Wyman/Getty Images)

The resort-size tent occupying what is otherwise a dog park is disorienting and lavish. Sir Elton and David Furnish‘s guests — a pile of celebrities, rich donors, and selected illuminati — fill the tent for Gordon Ramsay’s dinner and actually shut up to watch the the live Oscars telecast. Intently.

If you can see past the 1,500 telecast guests pouring through, the walls of the Dolby Ballroom will be covered in 170 newly commissioned drawings of film luminaries, reminiscent of industry haunts Sardi’s and the Brown Derby. In hand, and soon to be in mouths, will be salmon Oscars and 24-karat-gold chocolate Oscars from Wolfgang Puck. In recent years, the Academy has booked headline talent like John Legend to anchor itchy-footed guests to the Dolby longer after the show. No word yet on if there will be a repeat for 2016.

Only Oscar winners will get to sip from a special 1988 “Rare” Piper-Heidsieck in the winners’ engravers room, while the other guests at the Oscars will swill from a limited edition of 1,000 bottles that are not for sale anywhere. (The bottles’ foil tiara is comprised of a word amalgam of the word “Oscar”.)

Elsewhere, David Beckham’s Haig Club Whiskey will pour, though the Angeleno football legend and father of burgeoning models and photographers from the Beckham clan will not be there himself. Sterling Vineyards from NorCal complements the wine portfolio.

2oth Century Fox Viewing and After PartyHollywood Athletic Club

The post-Globes victory bash for “The Martian” and Team Fox. (Todd Williamson/Getty Images for FOX)

They have so many horses in so many races there is bound to be gold here from their 26 nominations. Any wins for “The Revenant”, “The Martian”, “Bridge of Spies”, or Jennifer Lawrence for “Joy” will bring whoops to this necessarily large space down the street from the Dolby.

Weinstein Viewing Party

The Montage

Their third party of the weekend is where potential winners like Cate Blanchett, Ennio Morricone, and their 10 nominations.

Vanity Fair PartyBeverly Hills, Entrance at the Annenberg Center

Back on Oscar night 2015, we knew one of these two was headed for an intergalactically successful year. (Getty Images for Vanity Fair)

A lot has changed in the 23 years since Steve Tisch and Graydon Carter co-hosted the first VF Oscar night party together, back when the show was still on a Monday night. A lot has evolved even since last year, Graydon Carter‘s first in a new custom-built space in Beverly Hills.

For one, the magazine’s Hollywood issue cover and stars arrived this year via Snapchat. Fleeting digital missives from the VF Oscar night event will flow out in inverse proportion to the flow of wannabe guests trying to get in. Expect Oscar winners scarfing In-N-Out burgers and bizarro hangs like J.J. Abrams and Lady Gaga (above), or Jared Leto photobombing anyone within range.

Who's Boycotting Oscars So Far - And Who's Just Mad (Photos)

The director has refused to attend this year's Academy Awards because no people of color were nominated. "How is it possible for the 2nd consecutive year all 20 contenders under the actor category are white? And let’s not even get into the other branches. 40 white actors in 2 years and no flava at all. We can’t act?! WTF!!” he tweeted.

The actress -- whose husband, Will Smith, was snubbed for Best Actor for "Concussion" -- pondered on social media whether people of color should participate in the Oscars at all. “At the Oscars, people of color are always welcomed to give out awards, even entertain, but we are rarely recognized for our artistic accomplishments.

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Will Smith

The actor announced that he will not be attending this year’s Oscars ceremony in support of the boycott proposed by wife Jada Pinkett Smith.

"At this current time, we’re uncomfortable to stand there and say, ‘This is OK,'" he said.

The actor, while presenting a King Legacy Award to Academy president Cheryl Boone Isaacs, pointed out that this is the second year in a row the Academy has failed to nominate a single non-white actor. "For 20 opportunities to celebrate actors of color, actresses of color, to be missed last year is one thing; for that to happen again this year is unforgivable.”

The filmmaker told TheWrap that he plans to join the boycott, and said "I thought about this all day, and I don’t plan to go to the show, I don’t plan to watch it and I don’t plan to go to an Oscar party."

The actor-director, who will host the Academy Awards on February 28, made light of the controversy. He tweeted a new Oscars promo along with the caption “The #Oscars. The White BET Awards.”

The Academy

Tyrese Gibson

The “Furious 7” star called on Academy Awards host Chris Rock to pull out of the ceremony after no people of color were nominated in its 20 acting categories. He also went into more detail on social media, saying if the situation involved the under-representation of LGBT nominees, there is no question things would be different.

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Don Cheadle The actor joined the discussion Sunday by tweeting at Chris Rock, saying he’ll be “parking cars” at the Hollywood & Highland complex the night of the ceremony.

"The View" host tore into the lack of diversity during Tuesday's episode: “We have this conversation every year and it pisses me off."

The View

BET Founder Bob Johnson

Johnson didn't just blame Oscar voters for the lack of diversity among this year's nominees, he told TheWrap studios must greenlight more diverse projects. He also implored African Americans to tell their own stories rather than depend on the Hollywood establishment.

"If you’re the African-American society and you wait for white America to say ‘I’m gonna tell your stories,’ first of all, they don’t know them or appreciate them, and second of all, that is not in their DNA,” he said.

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Mark Ruffalo

The "Hulk" actor told BBC Breakfast that he is "weighing" taking part in the Oscar boycott, stating that "the entire American system is rife with white privilege racism. It goes into our justice system.” He later took to Twitter to clarify his statements, in which he said that he will be attending the awards "in support of the victims of clergy Sexual Abuse and good journalism."

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Earl Ofari Hutchinson

Los Angeles Urban Policy Roundtable President Earl Ofari Hutchinson said his organization will "launch a nationwide 'TV Tune Out' of the Oscars ceremony, February 28. This will send the message that diversity in the film industry must be more than a hollow promise."

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Al Sharpton’s National Action Network

Al Sharpton’s civil rights organization is calling for a boycott of this year’s Oscars. “The lack of African Americans and women excluded from the major categories of Oscar nominees is appalling,” the chapter’s political director, Najee Ali said in a statement. “Cheryl Boone Issacs, the African-American president of the academy, is nothing but a pawn, and the black face of Hollywood’s system and culture that is racist, sexist and lacks true diversity.”

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Academy members Michael Moore and Spike Lee vow they will not attend the event over lack of diversity among nominees